कोटितीर्थस्य माहात्म्यं तीर्थं काकह्रदं तथा । जम्बुकेश्वरतीर्थं च सारस्वतमतः परम्
koṭitīrthasya māhātmyaṃ tīrthaṃ kākahradaṃ tathā | jambukeśvaratīrthaṃ ca sārasvatamataḥ param
Hier wird die Größe des Koṭitīrtha gelehrt; ebenso die heilige Furt namens Kākahrada; auch das Jambukeśvara-Tīrtha; und danach der vortreffliche Bericht, bekannt als die Sārasvata-Überlieferung.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) (deduced for Āvantya/Revā narrative style)
Tirtha: Koṭitīrtha; Kākahrada; Jambukeśvara-tīrtha; Sārasvata (kathā/paramparā)
Type: kund
Listener: sages (munis)
Scene: A map-like procession: pilgrims move from a broad river ghat labeled Koṭitīrtha to a shaded pond (Kākahrada) with birds; then to a shrine under a jambu tree (Jambukeśvara); finally a small āśrama where sages teach (Sārasvata).
Pilgrimage is framed as dharma-in-action: remembering and visiting named tīrthas is itself a purifying discipline that connects the devotee to sacred history and merit (puṇya).
Koṭitīrtha, Kākahrada, and Jambukeśvara-tīrtha are explicitly listed as revered sites in the Revā Khaṇḍa’s sacred itinerary.
No explicit rite is stated in this verse; it functions as a catalog/introduction to the māhātmya of these tīrthas.